Source : The Business Times, September 11, 2007
THE upcoming integrated development at one-north is expected to generate more interest in the area and drive up housing prices and retail rents there, market watchers said.
On Sunday, property giant CapitaLand and New Creation Church's Rock Productions said they will be investing some $660 million to build a lifestyle hub in one-north, JTC Corporation's science hub. The project will be located right next to Buona Vista MRT station.
The hub, which will be the biggest retail development by far in the area once it comes up by 2011, will push up residential prices and rents as well as rentals for retail space in the vicinity, experts said.
'You probably will see residential and retail prices going up in the area,' said Mavis Seow, CB Richard Ellis' executive director for retail services.
'The Holland area is already a very much sought after location. Once the project is developed, it will only get better.'
Rents in the Holland Village area are now between $8 and $15 per square foot per month (psf pm), she said.
CapitaLand, which will invest some $380 million, will own the retail and entertainment component of the project, which will have some 180,000-200,000 sq ft of net lettable area.
Rock Productions will invest $280 million. The company, which is the business arm of the 16,000-strong New Creation Church, will manage the hub's civic and cultural zone, which will include a 5,000-seat state-of- the-art theatre. The civic and cultural zone will have a gross floor area of some 323,000 sq ft in all.
Pua Seck Guan, chief executive of CapitaLand's retail arm, said that in line with the developer's asset-light strategy, the retail and entertainment component could eventually be injected into the developer's listed real estate investment trust (Reit) CapitaMall Trust.
'The hub will not be a traditional shopping mall,' he said. 'As the developer, we will take the risk - until investors are convinced it is sustainable - before selling.'
The mall will have mostly F&B and entertainment units as is the case with Clarke Quay, Mr Pua said. The retail component will be smaller than in CapitaLand's other malls.
Possible tenants could include a gourmet supermarket, trade services catering to people living and working in one-north, and even a dance club, he said.
The hub is however guaranteed some footfall from New Creation Church's congregation, said Matthew Kang, director of Rock Productions.
New Creation Church will be the theatre's 'anchor tenant' and will hold both its Sunday and weekday service there.
At present, the church uses the Rock Auditorium at Suntec City, which seats about 1,400 people.
'We wanted to look for a place to move to; the congregation was getting bigger,' Mr Kang said.
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